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Google succeeds in bid to throw out medical records claim

The software giant and its artificial intelligence arm DeepMind was facing legal action over the transfer of patient data by an NHS trust.

Brian Farmer
Friday 19 May 2023 07:46 EDT
Google has succeeded in a bid to throw out a High Court claim brought on behalf of around 1.6 million people about the transfer of their medical records by an NHS trust (PA)
Google has succeeded in a bid to throw out a High Court claim brought on behalf of around 1.6 million people about the transfer of their medical records by an NHS trust (PA) (PA Wire)

GoogleĀ has succeeded in a bid to throw out a High Court claim brought on behalf of around 1.6 million people about the transfer of their medical records by an NHS trust.

The software giant and its artificial intelligence arm DeepMind was facing legal action over the transfer of patient data by the Royal Free NHS Foundation Trust.

Records were transferred by the trust for use in the developing of a mobile app called Streams, which would analyse patient data and alert doctors if they were at risk of developing or had developed an acute kidney injury, a serious condition that can be fatal.

The claim form and the particulars of claim should be struck out at this stage and summary judgment entered for the defendants

Mrs Justice Heather Williams

Andrew Prismall, who was treated at the Royal Free, brought the damages claim on behalf of the patients who had data transferred and alleged it was a misuse of private information.

Lawyers for Google and DeepMind said the claim was ā€œbound to failā€ and should be struck out.

A judge has ruled in their favour.

Mrs Justice Heather Williams announced her decision on Friday after considering legal arguments at a High Court hearing in London in March.

She said in a written ruling: ā€œThe claim form and the particulars of claim should be struck out at this stage and summary judgment entered for the defendants.ā€

A barrister representing Mr Prismall had told the judge that records transferred were not anonymised and data was shared without patientsā€™ knowledge or consent.

There is no realistic prospect of the court concluding at trial that the members of the class across the board experienced a wrongful interference with their data

Mrs Justice Heather Williams

Timothy Pitt-Payne KC said that, according to a witness for Google and DeepMind, only 200 to 300 patients were being treated by the Royal Freeā€™s renal team during the time of the appā€™s testing.

He said despite that ā€œsmall numberā€, the Streams system had ā€œalready been loadedā€ with about ā€œ1.6 million or moreā€ patientsā€™ medical records ā€œregardless of whether they were of any relevance at all to nephrologyā€.

Antony White KC, for Google and DeepMind, said there was ā€œno real prospectā€ of Mr Prismallā€™s claim on behalf of the large group succeeding.

Mr White said clinicians did not access any patient data which they would not in any event have ā€œaccessed in their normal practiceā€.

He said everyone represented in the group must have ā€œthe same interestā€ in the claim.

But he said there was a big variation in the nature and quantity of the data sent to the system.

Mrs Justice Williams said: ā€œThis is not a situation in which every member of the claimant class, or indeed any given member of the class, has a realistic prospect of establishing a reasonable expectation of privacy in respect of their relevant medical recordsā€¦ā€

She added: ā€œThere is no realistic prospect of the court concluding at trial that the members of the class across the board experienced a wrongful interference with their data.

ā€œIt therefore follows that the current claim is bound to fail.ā€

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